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Chapter 1 Introduction to Chemistry
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Section 1.1 Chemistry OBJECTIVES:
Define chemistry and differentiate among it’s traditional divisions.
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Section 1.1 Chemistry OBJECTIVES:
List several reasons to study chemistry.
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What is Chemistry? The study of “matter”, its composition, properties, and the changes it undergoes. Everyday life? Applied Chemistry- is using chemistry to attain certain goals, in fields like medicine, agriculture, and manufacturing Pure chemistry- gathers knowledge for the sake of knowledge
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5 Major Areas of Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry- concerned with the composition of substances. Inorganic Chemistry- primarily deals with substances without carbon Organic Chemistry- essentially all substances containing carbon Biochemistry- Chemistry of living things Physical Chemistry- describes the behavior of chemicals (ex. stretching)
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Chemistry is central to modern science, and to almost all human endeavors. important to all sciences - biology, geology, physics, engineers, etc. a natural science. a language with its own vocabulary. a way of thinking.
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Why Study Chemistry? everyone and everything around us involves chemistry What in the world isn’t Chemistry? helps you make choices possible career for your future used to attain a specific goal Do you remember “pure” and “applied” chemistry?
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Section 1.2 Chemistry Far and Wide
OBJECTIVES: Summarize ways in which chemistry affects your daily life.
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Section 1.2 Chemistry Far and Wide
OBJECTIVES: Describe the impact of chemistry on various fields of science.
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Chemistry Far and Wide Materials- perfume, steel, ceramics, plastics, rubber, paints, nonstick cooking utensils, polyester fibers Energy- greater demands conserve it, or produce more fossil fuels, solar, batteries, nuclear (don’t forget pollution!)
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Chemistry Far and Wide Medicine and Biotechnology-
vitamin C, penicillin, aspirin materials for artery transplants and hipbones Human Genome Project bacteria producing insulin cloning
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Chemistry Far and Wide Agriculture- world’s food supply
plant growth hormones ways to protect crops disease resistant plants The Environment- both risks and benefits involved in discoveries carbon dioxide, ozone, warming
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Chemistry Far and Wide Astronomy and Space Exploration-
composition of the planets analyze moon rocks planet atmospheres life on other planets?
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Section 1.3 Thinking Like a Scientist
OBJECTIVES: Describe the steps involved in the scientific method.
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Section 1.3 Thinking Like a Scientist
OBJECTIVES: Distinguish between a theory and a scientific law.
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The Scientific Method A logical approach to solving problems or answering questions. Starts with observation- noting and recording facts hypothesis- an educated guess as to the cause of the problem, or a proposed explanation
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Scientific Method “controlled” experiment- designed to test the hypothesis only two possible answers hypothesis is right hypothesis is wrong Generates data observations from experiments. Modify hypothesis - repeat the cycle
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Cycle repeats many times. The hypothesis gets more and more certain.
Becomes a theory A thoroughly tested model that explains why things behave a certain way. Observations Hypothesis Experiment
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Theory can never be proven- due to new information
Useful because they predict behavior Help us form mental pictures of processes (models) Observations Hypothesis Experiment
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Another outcome is that certain behavior is repeated many times
Scientific Law is developed (math?) Describes how things behave Law- tells how Theory- tells why Observations Hypothesis Experiment
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Law Modify Observations Theory (Model) Hypothesis Experiment
Prediction Modify Experiment Experiment Law
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Section 1.4 How to Study Chemistry
OBJECTIVES: Explain why learning chemistry requires daily effort.
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Section 1.4 How to Study Chemistry
OBJECTIVES: Describe the importance of writing in the study of chemistry.
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How to Study Chemistry Understanding and Applying Concepts
requires effort on your part read materials carefully take thorough notes you can use study often and effectively quiet, well-lit, remove distractions
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How to Study Chemistry Understanding and Applying Concepts
chemistry has a language of it’s own, so learn the vocabulary look around you, and make the connection to the level of atoms and molecules
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How to Study Chemistry Using Your Textbook name chemical compounds
write chemical formulas interpret graphs techniques to solve problems Use your Teacher and Textbook!
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How to Study Chemistry Using Your Textbook take good notes
solve Practice Problems read, keeping objectives in mind use the Chem ASAP! CD-ROM Student Study Guide (p. 24) section summaries; Key Terms
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How to Study Chemistry On Your Own go beyond the textbook
make flashcards reread and rewrite notes quiz yourself and classmates form a study group ASK, ASK, and ASK
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How to Study Chemistry Tests and Quizzes cramming never a good idea
set aside a certain amount of time every day get enough rest daily; nutrition read tests carefully / thoroughly do easy problems first show work, and evaluate answer
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